Choreographers Sidra Bell and Andrea Miller on Their Fall 2021 Premieres | 半岛体育

半岛体育

Classic Arts Features Choreographers Sidra Bell and Andrea Miller on Their Fall 2021 Premieres The new works will be presented at New York City Ballet鈥檚 Fall Fashion Gala on September 30.
Sidra Bell and Andrea Miller Umi Akiyoshi Photography, Anne-Michelle Mallory

New York City Ballet鈥檚 annual celebration of fashion and dance, the Fall Fashion Gala, returns for its ninth edition, with world premiere works by two powerhouse choreographers based in NYC. Both Sidra Bell and Andrea Miller are in the midst of critically-acclaimed, wildly prolific careers as makers and thinkers, whose conceptual and pedagogical approaches to dance inform the companies they鈥檝e each founded鈥擲idra Bell Dance New York and GALLIM, respectively.

Both Bell and Miller were originally commissioned to premiere new dances in Fall 2020; both were then asked to collaborate with filmmaker Ezra Hurwitz to create pieces for NYCB鈥檚 New Works Festival, a digital dance-film initiative launched last fall as a way to continue to create safely during the pandemic.

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Emily Kikta and Peter Walker in Sidra Bell鈥檚 pixelation in a wave (Within Wires) Erin Baiano

For her New Works Festival film pixelation in a wave (Within Wires), Bell selected dancers that she鈥檇 previously cast for the stage piece intended for 2020. 鈥淲e were working unconventionally, on Zoom, then creating the piece site-specifically, working outdoors,鈥� she says of the process. 鈥淚 found that the dancers were very generous and open to collaborating on ideas.鈥�

This sense of openness and generosity are essential to her choreographic practice. 鈥淚 come in with my body and work from the ground up, working on phrases with the dancers in the studio,鈥� Bell says. 鈥淚 like to think that we鈥檙e all facilitating a generative process together, so it鈥檚 communal鈥擨 don鈥檛 really stand in the front, I just drop into the group and start playing with material.鈥�

Bell鈥檚 process has been shaped and informed by nearly 20 years as an active performer, choreographer, and educator. Alongside serving as the Artistic Director of Sidra Bell Dance New York, she has created more than 100 works for BODYTRAFFIC, The Juilliard School, Alonzo King鈥檚 LINES Ballet School, and others; and her works have been performed throughout the U.S. and internationally. She is the first Black woman to create a work for NYCB. She is a Master Lecturer at the University of Arts in Philadelphia, a Lecturer at SUNY Purchase Conservatory of Dance, Adjunct Professor at both Drexel University and Ball State University in Indiana, and founder and creative director of the award-winning MODULE Laboratory, an immersive platform for movement and theater artists.

The concurrent streams of Bell鈥檚 career are essential to her creative practice. 鈥淭eaching has been a really important portal for me to study the language of the form, to expand the language of the form, to learn,鈥� she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 moving through my body, receiving all this physical information from all of these communities across the world, and to share the language of dance and to be in process with people鈥攊t鈥檚 such a gift to be in education, not only to give, but to receive.鈥�

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Sidra Bell and Christopher John Rogers in rehearsal at New York City Ballet Erin Baiano

That spirit of collaboration, of giving and receiving, extends to Bell鈥檚 approach to her newest commission for NYCB. 鈥淚鈥檝e been working a lot with [NYCB Director of Costumes] Marc Happel鈥� he really is a wonderful guide and advisor,鈥� she says. 鈥淲e actually met at the end of 2019, and we started to think about how theatrical we wanted the costumes to be, thinking about scale and color.鈥� Bell selected CFDA Fashion Award-winning designer Christopher John Rogers as her collaborator; his designs have been worn by the likes of Vice President Kamala Harris, First Lady Michelle Obama, Lady Gaga, Rihanna, and more.

鈥淚 was really interested in structural optimism鈥攖hat was the undercurrent of what I was looking for in the designs, and that鈥檚 what drove me to Christopher,鈥� Bell says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 something very playful about his work, but there鈥檚 also a rigor to it.鈥� That combination of structural detail and lightness, and a shared interest in humor, are playing a significant role in her conception of the choreography. 鈥淚 want the costumes to act as a set element鈥攍ike other worldly forms,鈥� she adds. She has chosen music by Nicholas Britell, Oliver Davis, and Dosia McKay for her NYCB work.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been such a build-up since everything happened with shutdown,鈥� she reflects. 鈥淏eing able to have this jewel of a process, I鈥檓 just excited to jump into the studio.鈥�

Collaboration similarly lies at the core of Andrea Miller鈥檚 practice; what appeals to her about working with members of NYCB? 鈥淚 get a sense that they鈥檙e very brave and creativity is also part of what inspires them鈥攖hey dive into their artistry. That鈥檚 something I鈥檓 going to love.鈥�

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Unity Phelan in Andrea Miller鈥檚 new song Malik Wilson/NYCB

Her film for the New Works Festival, new song, featured four NYCB dancers moving in a dream-like, nearly continuous sequence on the campus of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. From the single-take camerawork to the incorporation of a diaphanous mist and splashing water, the film captures dance as part of a creative whole鈥攔eflective of Miller鈥檚 approach in general: 鈥淚 like to have time to just think, to dream as much as I can before I get into the studio. I鈥檓 building the world that I鈥檇 like to dance in.鈥�

GALLIM, founded in 2008, performs Miller鈥檚 works internationally, as well as offering training for dancers in improvisation, filmmaking, acting, site-specific work, and Miller鈥檚 methodology of movement and creativity. Miller鈥檚 works have been performed by other leading dance companies including Nederlands Dans Theater, Ballet Bern, Pennsylvania Ballet, and more; she is a Guggenheim Fellow and the first choreographer to be named Artist in Residence at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. At the heart of Miller鈥檚 works is a spirit of interdisciplinary boundlessness. A sought-after collaborator in film and fashion, Miller has created for Herm猫s, the actors Jessica Chastain and Kit Harington, and directors Ariel Schulman and Henry Joost, among others. Miller is also an Adjunct Professor at Marymount Manhattan College and The Juilliard School.

In July, Miller completed a weeklong run of her most recent work, You Are Here, an immersive sculpture, sound, and performance installation commissioned by Lincoln Center for Restart Stages. It featured audio portraits and live performances by NYC-based artists and citizens reflecting on the pandemic鈥檚 multifaceted effects on their lives. You Are Here marked the first time all 13 of Lincoln Center鈥檚 constituents, along with 11 community partners, collaborated on the same work. 鈥淧art of the reason that I made You Are Here was to focus explicitly on the pandemic, so that maybe it would be possible to process, heal, and move into other aspects of my experience,鈥� Miller says. 鈥淔or [this commission for] New York City Ballet, I do think it鈥檚 still somehow going to relate鈥� but in a new phase.鈥�

This combination of the external with personal experience is essential to Miller鈥檚 work; as she explains, 鈥淔or me, it鈥檚 part of my makeup, when I walk into the studio鈥攚hat鈥檚 happening in the world around me鈥攁nd in my own trajectory as an artist.鈥�

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Andrea Miller with Esteban Cort谩zar and Marc Happel Nina Westervelt

Her decision to collaborate with Paris-based Colombian-American designer Esteban Cort谩zar for the Fall Fashion Gala similarly reflects her approach to the intermingling of the public and private, the personal and the artistic. 鈥淚 thought this invitation to choose a designer would be an opportunity to work with a South American artist,鈥� she says. 鈥淎nd Esteban is out of this world. Also, my husband is Colombian and I always want to be closer to his culture and that of my children.鈥� Colombian-Canadian singer-songwriter Lido Pimienta has been commissioned to compose the premiere鈥檚 music, which she will perform live as the first-ever female composer of color to be commissioned by the Company.

Miller draws inspiration from the characteristics of Cortaz谩r鈥檚 designs that first caught her attention. 鈥淭here鈥檚 movement in his work, as well as sculpture鈥攖hose [qualities] sometimes contradict themselves, but he does it so effortlessly,鈥� she says. 鈥淎nd he is also really comfortable with being bold and sparkly, subtle and strong.鈥�

鈥淚鈥檓 also very excited to be with my New York artistic family,鈥� Miller continues. 鈥淭here is something important in this time, for me, about being with New Yorkers, being with a New York organization. I think we all are processing something together.鈥�

Madelyn Sutton is an arts and culture writer based in Asheville, North Carolina.

 

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